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AGN deep multiwavelength surveys: the case of the Chandra Deep Field South

AGN deep multiwavelength surveys: the case of the Chandra Deep Field South. Fabrizio Fiore Simonetta Puccetti, Giorgio Lanzuisi. Table of content. Introduction Big scenario for structure formation: AGN & galaxy co-evolution SMBH census: search for highly obscured AGN X-ray surveys

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AGN deep multiwavelength surveys: the case of the Chandra Deep Field South

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  1. AGN deep multiwavelength surveys:the case of the Chandra Deep Field South Fabrizio Fiore Simonetta Puccetti, Giorgio Lanzuisi

  2. Table of content • Introduction • Big scenario for structure formation: AGN & galaxy co-evolution • SMBH census: search for highly obscured AGN • X-ray surveys • Unobscured and moderately obscured AGN density • Infrared surveys • Compton thick AGN • CDFS 2Msec observation: the X-ray view of IR bright AGN: • Spectra of IR sources directly detected in X-rays • X-ray “stacking” analysis of the sources not directly detected.

  3. Two seminal results: • The discovery of SMBH in the most local bulges; tight correlationbetween MBH and bulge properties. • The BH mass density obtained integrating the AGN L.-F. and the CXB ~ that obtained from local bulges Co-evolution of galaxies and SMBH  most BH mass accreted during luminous AGN phases! Most bulges passed a phase of activity: • Complete SMBH census, • 2) full understanding of AGN feedback • are key ingredients to understand galaxy evolution

  4. AGN and galaxy co-evolution • Early on • Strong galaxy interactions= violent star-bursts • Heavily obscured QSOs • When galaxies coalesce • accretion peaks • QSO becomes optically visible as AGN winds blow out gas. • Later times • SF & accretion quenched • red spheroid, passive evolution

  5. To prove this scenario we need to have: • Complete SMBH census, • Physical models for AGN feedbacks • Observational constraints to these models AGN and galaxy co-evolution • Early on • Strong galaxy interactions= violent star-bursts • Heavily obscured QSOs • When galaxies coalesce • accretion peaks • QSO becomes optically visible as AGN winds blow out gas. • Later times • SF & accretion quenched • red spheroid, passive evolution

  6. Evidences for missing SMBH While the CXB energy density provides a statistical estimate of SMBH growth, the lack, so far, of focusing instrument above 10 keV (where the CXB energy density peaks), frustrates our effort to obtain acomprehensive picture of the SMBH evolutionary properties. Gilli et al. 2007 43-44 44-44.5 Marconi 2004-2007 Menci , Fiore et al. 2004, 2006, 2008

  7. 42-43 43-44 44-44.5 44.5-45.5 >45.5 AGN density La Franca, Fiore et al. 2005 Menci, Fiore et al. 2008 Paucity of Seyfert like sources @ z>1 is real? Or, is it, at least partly, a selection effect? Are we missing in Chandra and XMM surveys highly obscured (NH1024 cm-2) AGN? Which are common in the local Universe…

  8. Highly obscured Mildly Compton thick INTEGRAL survey ~ 100 AGN Sazonov et al. 2006

  9. Central engine Dusty torus Completing the census of SMBH • X-ray surveys: • very efficient in selecting unobscured and moderately obscured AGN • Highly obscured AGN recovered only in ultra-deep exposures • IR surveys: • AGNs highly obscured at optical and X-ray wavelengths shine in the MIR thanks to the reprocessing of the nuclear radiation by dust

  10. X-ray-MIR surveys • CDFS-Goods MUSIC catalog(Grazian et al. 2006, Brusa, FF et al. 2008) Area 0.04 deg2 • ~200 X-ray sources, 2-10 keV down to 210-16 cgs, 0.5-2 keV down to 510-17 cgs 150 spectroscopic redshifts • 1100 MIPS sources down to 40 Jy, 3.6m detection down to 0.08 Jy • Ultradeep Optical/NIR photometry, R~27.5, K~24 • ELAIS-S1 SWIRE/XMM/Chandra survey(Puccetti, FF et al. 2006, Feruglio,FF et al. 2007, La Franca, FF et al. 2008). Area 0.5 deg2 • 500 XMM sources, 205 2-10 keV down to 310-15 cgs, >half with spectroscopic redshifts. • 2600 MIPS sources down to 100 Jy, 3.6m detection down to 6 Jy • Relatively deep Optical/NIR photometry, R~25, K~19 • COSMOSXMM/Chandra/Spitzer. Area ~1 deg2 • ~1700 Chandra sources down to 610-16 cgs, >half with spectroscopic redshifts. • 900 MIPS sources down to 500 Jy, 3.6m detection down to 10 Jy, R~26.5 • In future we will add: • CDFS-Goods, Chandra 2Msec observation • CDFN-Goods • COSMOS deep MIPS survey

  11. z = 0.73 structure 40 arcmin 52 arcmin z-COSMOS faint Full COSMOS field Color: XMM first year Chandra deep and wide fields CDFS 2Msec 0.05deg2 CCOSMOS 200ksec 0.5deg2 100ksec 0.4deg2 ~400 sources 1.8 Msec ~1800 sources Elvis et al. 2008 20 arcmin 1 deg

  12. AGN directly detected in X-rays Open circles=logNH>23 Open squares = MIR/O>1000 sources (Tozzi et al. 2003)

  13. MIR selection of CT AGN Fiore et al. 2003 ELAIS-S1 obs. AGN ELAIS-S1 24mm galaxies HELLAS2XMM CDFS obs. AGN Unobscured obscured MIR/O Open symbols = unobscured AGN Filled symbols = optically obscured AGN X/0

  14. MIR selection of CT AGN Fiore et al. 2008a Fiore et al. 2008b CDFS X-ray HELLAS2XMM GOODS 24um galaxies COSMOS X-ray COSMOS 24um galaxies R-K Open symbols = unobscured AGN Filled symbols = optically obscured AGN * = photo-z

  15. GOODS MIR AGNs F24/FR>1000 R-K>4.5 • <SFR-IR>~200!! Msun/yr • <SFR-UV>~7!! Msun/yr • <SFR-X>~65 Msun/yr F24um/FR<200 R-K>4.5 • <SFR-IR> ~ 18 Msun/yr • <SFR-UV> ~13 Msun/yr • <SFR-X>~20 Msun/yr Stack of Chandra images of MIR sources not directly detected in X-rays • F24um/FR>1000 R-K>4.5 • logF(1.5-4keV) stacked sources=-17 @z~2 logLobs(2-8keV) stacked sources ~41.8 • log<LIR>~44.8==> logL(2-8keV) unabs.~43 • Difference implieslogNH~24 Fiore et. al. 2008a

  16. Program of the project (1) • Selection of IR sources with X-ray detection which are likely to host a highly obscured AGN • Extraction of the Chandra spectra of these sources from the event files • Characterization of the X-ray spectra: estimate of the absorbing column density • Evaluation of systematic errors: • Background evaluation • Combination of data from different observations

  17. Program of project (2) • Selection of IR sources without a direct X-ray detection which are likely to host a highly obscured AGN • ‘Stacking’ of X-ray images at the position of these sources • Analysis of the ‘stacked’ images

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